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Thriving in the wake of a storm: A systematic qualitative review & meta-synthesis on facilitating post-traumatic growth in patients living with Acquired Brain Injury
Neuropsychological Rehabilitation, Pages: 1 - 27
Swansea University Authors: Pamela Arroyo Jarrin, Lowri Wilkie, Elen Davies , Zoe Fisher , Andrew Kemp
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DOI (Published version): 10.1080/09602011.2024.2356891
Abstract
Acquired Brain Injury (ABI) often results in significant challenges, yet it may also facilitate Post-Traumatic Growth (PTG). This review explores a critical question: “What are the main factors contributing to PTG following ABI, and what potential barriers to its development are perceived by ABI sur...
Published in: | Neuropsychological Rehabilitation |
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ISSN: | 0960-2011 1464-0694 |
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Informa UK Limited
2024
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa66638 |
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This review explores a critical question: “What are the main factors contributing to PTG following ABI, and what potential barriers to its development are perceived by ABI survivors?” Here we aim to systematically uncover these contributors and barriers to PTG through a meta-synthesis, involving a comprehensive review of previously published qualitative research on this topic. A literature search was conducted across PsycINFO, CINAHL, and MEDLINE up to December 2022 to identify studies for inclusion. From an initial pool of 1,946 records, eleven articles were selected for inclusion. Reflexive thematic analysis yielded three analytical themes including “Journey to Self-Rediscovery”, “Strength in Connection” and “Overcoming Obstacles”. Our findings also revealed facilitators and barriers across multiple levels of scale including personal (e.g., acceptance versus resignation), interpersonal (e.g., positive social ties versus difficulties making social connections), and systemic (e.g., new meaning and purpose versus financial constraints) scales. 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v2 66638 2024-06-10 Thriving in the wake of a storm: A systematic qualitative review & meta-synthesis on facilitating post-traumatic growth in patients living with Acquired Brain Injury 882d0f5ce6bb5ef7032e62c85f62529c Pamela Arroyo Jarrin Pamela Arroyo Jarrin true false c2dd53e9f6c691a340f6170b24b032a2 Lowri Wilkie Lowri Wilkie true false 737fc3272d41df1a9106958a4a273e3a 0000-0002-3621-5308 Elen Davies Elen Davies true false b7d5965d35de6f683716c6eb1e82ff81 0000-0001-8150-2499 Zoe Fisher Zoe Fisher true false dfd05900f0e2409d3f67dca227c59a93 0000-0003-1146-3791 Andrew Kemp Andrew Kemp true false 2024-06-10 Acquired Brain Injury (ABI) often results in significant challenges, yet it may also facilitate Post-Traumatic Growth (PTG). This review explores a critical question: “What are the main factors contributing to PTG following ABI, and what potential barriers to its development are perceived by ABI survivors?” Here we aim to systematically uncover these contributors and barriers to PTG through a meta-synthesis, involving a comprehensive review of previously published qualitative research on this topic. A literature search was conducted across PsycINFO, CINAHL, and MEDLINE up to December 2022 to identify studies for inclusion. From an initial pool of 1,946 records, eleven articles were selected for inclusion. Reflexive thematic analysis yielded three analytical themes including “Journey to Self-Rediscovery”, “Strength in Connection” and “Overcoming Obstacles”. Our findings also revealed facilitators and barriers across multiple levels of scale including personal (e.g., acceptance versus resignation), interpersonal (e.g., positive social ties versus difficulties making social connections), and systemic (e.g., new meaning and purpose versus financial constraints) scales. Our research extends existing knowledge in ABI rehabilitation, providing a more nuanced understanding of the dynamics influencing PTG with implications for clinicians seeking to promote wellbeing following brain injury. Journal Article Neuropsychological Rehabilitation 0 1 27 Informa UK Limited 0960-2011 1464-0694 Acquired Brain Injury; ABI; post-traumatic growth; PTG; recovery; psychological growth after ABI 13 6 2024 2024-06-13 10.1080/09602011.2024.2356891 COLLEGE NANME COLLEGE CODE Swansea University SU Library paid the OA fee (TA Institutional Deal) Swansea University 2024-11-01T14:24:15.8506951 2024-06-10T17:07:18.7090591 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Psychology Pamela Arroyo Jarrin 1 Lowri Wilkie 2 Elen Davies 0000-0002-3621-5308 3 Zoe Fisher 0000-0001-8150-2499 4 Andrew Kemp 0000-0003-1146-3791 5 66638__30773__9d2bc48cd8de4a3786cba3e00058343f.pdf 66638.VoR.pdf 2024-06-27T15:43:32.4718825 Output 1329770 application/pdf Version of Record true © 2024 The Author(s). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. true eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ |
title |
Thriving in the wake of a storm: A systematic qualitative review & meta-synthesis on facilitating post-traumatic growth in patients living with Acquired Brain Injury |
spellingShingle |
Thriving in the wake of a storm: A systematic qualitative review & meta-synthesis on facilitating post-traumatic growth in patients living with Acquired Brain Injury Pamela Arroyo Jarrin Lowri Wilkie Elen Davies Zoe Fisher Andrew Kemp |
title_short |
Thriving in the wake of a storm: A systematic qualitative review & meta-synthesis on facilitating post-traumatic growth in patients living with Acquired Brain Injury |
title_full |
Thriving in the wake of a storm: A systematic qualitative review & meta-synthesis on facilitating post-traumatic growth in patients living with Acquired Brain Injury |
title_fullStr |
Thriving in the wake of a storm: A systematic qualitative review & meta-synthesis on facilitating post-traumatic growth in patients living with Acquired Brain Injury |
title_full_unstemmed |
Thriving in the wake of a storm: A systematic qualitative review & meta-synthesis on facilitating post-traumatic growth in patients living with Acquired Brain Injury |
title_sort |
Thriving in the wake of a storm: A systematic qualitative review & meta-synthesis on facilitating post-traumatic growth in patients living with Acquired Brain Injury |
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882d0f5ce6bb5ef7032e62c85f62529c c2dd53e9f6c691a340f6170b24b032a2 737fc3272d41df1a9106958a4a273e3a b7d5965d35de6f683716c6eb1e82ff81 dfd05900f0e2409d3f67dca227c59a93 |
author_id_fullname_str_mv |
882d0f5ce6bb5ef7032e62c85f62529c_***_Pamela Arroyo Jarrin c2dd53e9f6c691a340f6170b24b032a2_***_Lowri Wilkie 737fc3272d41df1a9106958a4a273e3a_***_Elen Davies b7d5965d35de6f683716c6eb1e82ff81_***_Zoe Fisher dfd05900f0e2409d3f67dca227c59a93_***_Andrew Kemp |
author |
Pamela Arroyo Jarrin Lowri Wilkie Elen Davies Zoe Fisher Andrew Kemp |
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Pamela Arroyo Jarrin Lowri Wilkie Elen Davies Zoe Fisher Andrew Kemp |
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Neuropsychological Rehabilitation |
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0960-2011 1464-0694 |
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10.1080/09602011.2024.2356891 |
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Informa UK Limited |
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description |
Acquired Brain Injury (ABI) often results in significant challenges, yet it may also facilitate Post-Traumatic Growth (PTG). This review explores a critical question: “What are the main factors contributing to PTG following ABI, and what potential barriers to its development are perceived by ABI survivors?” Here we aim to systematically uncover these contributors and barriers to PTG through a meta-synthesis, involving a comprehensive review of previously published qualitative research on this topic. A literature search was conducted across PsycINFO, CINAHL, and MEDLINE up to December 2022 to identify studies for inclusion. From an initial pool of 1,946 records, eleven articles were selected for inclusion. Reflexive thematic analysis yielded three analytical themes including “Journey to Self-Rediscovery”, “Strength in Connection” and “Overcoming Obstacles”. Our findings also revealed facilitators and barriers across multiple levels of scale including personal (e.g., acceptance versus resignation), interpersonal (e.g., positive social ties versus difficulties making social connections), and systemic (e.g., new meaning and purpose versus financial constraints) scales. Our research extends existing knowledge in ABI rehabilitation, providing a more nuanced understanding of the dynamics influencing PTG with implications for clinicians seeking to promote wellbeing following brain injury. |
published_date |
2024-06-13T14:24:13Z |
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11.036815 |